Since originally writing these series of articles some three years ago I've come across some additional articles that help to document and substantiate the main conclusion of the essay that Macdonald never "dropped" Walter Travis from the NGLA committee charged with the design and construction of the golf course as he later claimed in his book, "Scotland's Gift - Golf" written after Travis's death. Instead, the contemporaneous record shows that Travis was there from literally the conception and research phases, serving as CBM's point person in the US while Macdonald was researching the best holes abroad, down to the site selection, design, build, grow-in, and Invitational tournament soft opening across the period from 1904 through 1910.
In fact, as this snippet from an article reproduced from a London newspaper in the
Boston Evening Transcript in April 1910 as written by John Sutherland* after his November 1909 visit to the National Links shows,
Macdonald even had an original (non-template) hole named after Walter J. Travis (and his son-in-law H.J. Whigham), the 15th now known as "Narrows".
More to come if there's any renewed interest.
* John Sutherland was the Secretary of Royal Dornoch Golf Club beginning in 1883 for the next 58 years.